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BEST OF DOUG NOLAND
November 11, 2008
Debt Trap:
The economy lost 651,000 jobs in three months. Auto sales have
collapsed, and retail sales have "fallen off a cliff." And there is at
this point little indication that Credit Availability will normalize
anytime soon for household, corporate or municipal borrowers. While the
extraordinary efforts by the Fed and global central bankers have
loosened the clogged up inter-bank lending market, risk markets remain
hopelessly paralyzed. The unfolding collapse of the leveraged
speculating community continues to overhanging the marketplace.
Securitization markets are still essentially closed for business.
We can continue to analyze developments in the context of two
overarching themes: First, there is the implosion of contemporary "Wall
Street finance." Second, the bursting of the Credit Bubble has initiated
what will be an arduous and protracted economic adjustment. Each week
provides additional confirmation of the interplay between the breakdown
of Wall Street risk intermediation and the bursting of the U.S. Bubble
Economy. This process has gained overwhelming momentum.
I know some analysts are anticipating an eventual return to "normalcy."
The thought is that it is only a matter of time before "shock and awe"
policymaking and Trillions of newly created liquidity entice investors
and speculators back into risk assets. This view is too optimistic, and
history offers an especially poor guide in this respect. By and large,
the unprecedented growth in Federal Reserve and global central bank
balance sheets is (scarcely) accommodating de-leveraging. Between the
hedge funds, global "proprietary trading" and other leveraged
speculators, it is not unreasonable to contemplate an overhang of
(prospective forced and deliberate sales) of upwards of $10 Trillion.
It’s popular to label Federal Reserve operations as a massive effort to
"print money." Yet it is important to recognize that, at least to this
point, the expansion of the Fed assets ("Fed Credit") is counterbalanced
by the collapsing balance sheets of leveraged financial operators. The
inflationary effects – the increased purchasing power created by the
expansion of Credit – occurred back when the original loan was made,
securitized, and leveraged by, say, a hedge fund. Today’s ballooning
central bank holdings (and TARP spending) may very well stem financial
system implosion. This is, however, a far cry from engendering a
meaningful increase in either the market’s appetite for risk assets or
the expansion of new system Credit in the real economy.
I don’t want to imply that unprecedented monetary policy measures aren’t
having an impact. Overnight lending rates (Libor) were quoted at 0.33%
today, down from a spike to almost 7.00% in late September. And at
2.29%, three-month Libor has dropped from early October’s 4.82%. Other
measures of systemic risk and liquidity premiums (including the 2- and
10-year dollar swap spreads) have dropped dramatically over the past
month.
The problem is that the "unclogging" of inter-bank and "money" markets
has had little effect on the Pricing and Availability of Credit for the
vast majority of borrowers operating throughout the real economy. After
ending September at about 650, junk bond spreads have surged to 950 bps.
Investment-grade bond spreads are also higher today than at the end of
the third quarter. Benchmark MBS spreads have changed little, while
Jumbo mortgage borrowing rates remain elevated. Risk premiums for
municipal borrowings have been reduced only somewhat from extreme
levels. Unsound borrowers everywhere have little hope of borrowing
anywhere.
There are complaints out of Washington that, despite oodles of bailout
funding, the banks are refusing to lend. Well, total bank Credit has
expanded $575bn over the past 10 weeks, or 32% annualized. Importantly,
the asset-backed securities (ABS), collateralized debt obligation (CDO),
and securitization markets generally remain closed for new business.
The heart of the matter is not so much that banks are refusing to extend
Credit but that the entire mechanism of Wall Street risk intermediation
has collapsed. After ballooning into multi-Trillion dollar avenues for
Credit expansion, intermediation through the ABS and CDO markets is
basically over. The convertible bond market has also badly
malfunctioned, along with the "private-label" MBS marketplace. Wall
Street’s "auction-rate securities" has ceased as a mechanism for Credit
expansion, along with myriad other avenues for securitization. And,
importantly, derivatives markets, having evolved into an essential
element of contemporary risk intermediation and Credit expansion, have
suffered a devastating crisis of confidence. Scores of leveraged
strategies are no longer viable. Indeed, Monetary Processes essential
for funding broad cross-sections of the economy have completely broken
down.
Even if banks had a desire to make the same types of risky loans Wall
Street financed throughout the boom (which they clearly don’t), it is
difficult to envisage how bank Credit could today adequately compensate
for the interrelated collapses in Wall Street risk intermediation and
leveraged speculation. And unlike previous crises, no amount of rate
cutting, liquidity injections, or policymaker jawboning will revive
leveraged speculation. That historic Bubble and mania has burst, and it
is now only a matter of waiting to dissect the devastation wrought by
the unfolding run on the industry. A typical Federal Reserve-induced
return to risk-taking in the Credit markets will be stymied for some
time to come by an unrivaled inventory of debt instruments overhanging
the markets.
The critical issue then becomes how the system can generate sufficient
new Credit to keep our asset markets and Bubble economy from completely
imploding. Well, we can assume at this point that the Fed will continue
to accommodate de-leveraging through the ballooning of its balance
sheet. At the same time, the federal government will soon be running
Trillion dollar annual deficits. GSE balance sheets will likely commence
a period of aggressive expansion. And, importantly, the banking system
will have no alternative than to expand rapidly. At this point, timid
banks equate to a Bubble Economy spiraling into depression.
If the markets cooperate, perhaps over the coming months the now
breakneck economic contraction will somewhat stabilize. I fear, however,
that current dynamics are setting the stage for yet another stage of
this vicious crisis. Some analysts believe – and certainly it is the
Fed’s intention – for ultra-low interest rates to assist in the
recapitalization of the banking system. The early 1990’s provides a nice
example: aggressive rate cuts and a steep yield curve provided a
backdrop for troubled banks to quietly convalesce by raising cheap
deposits and sitting on a safe portfolio of longer-term government debt
securities. Why can’t a similar operation bail the banks out of their
current predicament?
One should note the stark contrasts between today’s environment and that
from the early nineties. First of all, 10-year government yields
averaged about 7.8% in the three years 1990 through ’92. Bond markets
back then were commencing a historic bull run and, strangely enough, the
price of government debt ran higher in the face of huge deficits. There
are reasons these days to fear an emergent bond bear. Second, from the
Fed’s "flow of funds" report, we know that "Total Net Borrowing and
Lending in Credit Markets" averaged $770 billion annually during the
’90-’92 period. "Total Net Borrowing…" last year approached a staggering
$4.40 TN. The important point is that today’s Bubble Economy Dynamics
were not in play in the early nineties. Sustaining the system required a
fraction of today’s Credit creation, thus there was little prevailing
pressure on the banks back then to lend amid their "convalescing."
Indeed, banking system impairment and resulting Fed policymaking
engendered the emergence of Wall Street finance in the early nineties –
from the Wall Street firms, the GSEs, securitizations, derivatives and
leveraged speculation. All were more than happy to take up the slack in
bank Credit creation – signficantly helping to reflate both the banking
system and the overall economy in the process.
With the Bursting of the Bubble in Wall Street Finance, the banking
system will today have no alternative than to lend and expand Credit
aggressively. The banks provide the only hope for reflation, and there
will be no room for nineties-style risk-free government carry trades.
Instead, it will now be the banking system’s role to take up enormous
systemic Credit slack and rapidly expand its portfolio of risk assets.
Especially at this precarious stage of the Credit cycle, the banking
system’s predicament ensures the ongoing need for hugely expensive
government funded industry recapitalizations.
In today’s interest rate and market environment, massive government
deficits don’t worry the bond market. I view the marketplace as quite
complacent when it comes to the scope of unfolding Treasury and agency
debt issuance. Actually, the Treasury, the GSEs and the banking system
have in concert succumbed to Debt Trap Dynamics. With Wall Street risk
intermediation now out of the equation, the system is down to four
principal sources of "money" creation – the Fed, Treasury, GSEs and the
Banks. It’s that old "inflate or die" dilemma that’s already smothered
Wall Street finance.
The good news is these sources of Credit creation do today retain the
capacity to somewhat stabilize financial and economic systems. The bad
news is that going forward all four must expand aggressively – in
collaboration - to forestall acute systemic crisis. All four must expand
aggressively to bolster a highly maladjusted economic system, in the
process sustaining confidence in the value of their liabilities. At some
point, one would expect a crisis of confidence with respect to the
quality of these Credit instruments. And, you know, the way things have
unfolded, Murphy’s Law would only seem to dictate a destabilizing jump
in market yields.
Doug Noland is a market strategist at Prudent Bear Funds. Their
website is www.prudentbear.com. |